Greening Social Work Education

Edited by Susan Hillock
Categories: Education, Higher Education, Health, Social Work & Psychology, Social Work
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Hardcover : 9781487555207, 320 pages, February 2024
Paperback : 9781487555221, 320 pages, February 2024
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781487555238, 320 pages, March 2024
Ebook (PDF) : 9781487555245, 320 pages, March 2024

Table of contents

Preface
Susan Hillock

Introduction
Susan Hillock

Part 1: Centring Indigenous Approaches and Celebrating Multi/Interdisciplinarity
Susan Hillock

1. Indigenous Sovereignty Is Climate Action: Centring Indigenous Lands and Jurisdiction in Social Work Education towards Climate Justice
Elizabeth Carlson-Manathara and Chris Hiller

2. Nature for Whom? Justice in Environmental Education
Stephen Hill, Stephanie Rutherford, and James Wilkes

3. The Challenges of Re-orienting Pre-service Teacher Education for Sustainability
Paul Elliott

4. An Invitation to the Learning Garden: Green Lessons from a School of Education
Kelly Young and Karleen Pendleton Jiménez

Part 2: Key Environmental Issues: What Every Social Worker Should Know
Susan Hillock

5. Social Ecology, Hierarchy, and Social Action: Opportunities for Eco-Social Work Education
Robert A. Case

6. Nutritional Social Work: An Avenue for Teaching in Social Work Education about Sustainability and the Climate Emergency
Arielle Dylan, Jenni Cammaert, and Lea Tufford

7. The War-Climate Nexus: Educating Future Social Workers about the Global Adversities Related to War, Climate Change, and Environmental Degradation
Bree Akesson

8. Finding a Place for Animals in Green Social Work Education and Practice
Jasmine Tiffany Ferreira, Atsuko Matsuoka, and John Sorenson

Part 3: Greening Social Work Education: Practical Application
Susan Hillock

9. Towards a Radical Ecological Grounding in Social Work Education
James P. Mulvale

10. Reimagining Environmental-Ecological Social Work in Québec
Sue-Ann MacDonald and Jeanne Dagenais-Lespérance

11. Greening Social Work Education: Teaching Environmental Rights in Community Practice
David Androff

12. The Red-Green Manifesto for Greening Social Work Education
Susan Hillock

Appendix A: Greening Social Work Education Resources

Contributors

Description

Despite urgent calls for global action, sustainable social work practice, and a solid “green” theoretical knowledge base, North American social work and helping professions have been slow to learn from community activists, acknowledge the international climate emergency, and act collectively to achieve climate justice.

Greening Social Work Education examines how social work educators can best incorporate sustainability content into social work curricula, integrate green teaching methods, and mobilize students and colleagues towards climate action, justice, and leadership. Drawing on Canadian content, this collection highlights Indigenous, eco-feminist, collective-action, and multi-interdisciplinary approaches to social work. The book provides a rationale for why the topic of greening is important for social work and the helping professions; discussion of current debates, tensions, and issues; useful ideas related to innovative interdisciplinary theoretical approaches, analyses, and constructs; and practical recommendations for teaching green social work education. In doing so, Greening Social Work Education strives to help social workers and educators gain the confidence and tools they need to transform their teaching and curricula.